Consider Herbicide Status Ahead of Summer Crop Planting

Grain growers in Queensland and New South Wales are being encouraged to consider the potential impact of residual herbicides as they weigh up what to plant this summer.

Experts warn dry conditions across much of eastern Australia’s grain belt through winter may have prolonged the efficacy of residual herbicides applied in paddocks earlier in the season.

Dry conditions during winter may mean herbicides are present in the soil in greater concentrations then growers would usually expect going into summer planting.

Grains Research and Development Corporation Crop Protection Officer – North Vicki Green said the simple fact was herbicides generally needed moisture to breakdown.

“The ongoing dry conditions during winter may mean herbicides are present in the soil in greater concentrations then growers would usually expect going into summer planting,” she said.

“This is not a dire situation, rather it just means growers and their advisers may have to look more closely at crop choice and variety selection ahead of planting.

“Most growers will be aware of the potential risks of residual herbicides in a season like this, but GRDC do have up-to-date information available if people want guidelines to soil behaviour with regard to pre-emergent herbicides.”

Mrs Green said when it did rain growers could also use the emergence of specific weeds as an indicator to what herbicides were still active in the soil.

“Unfortunately, when it rains weeds are usually the first things to respond, the upside is growers can use what weed types emerge as an indicator of what residual herbicides are still in the soil,” Mrs Green said.

The GRDC is committed to building grower and advisor knowledge about weed management and more specifically herbicides and their performance in different soil types under different seasonal conditions.

In recent years the GRDC have run a series of workshops, aimed at enhancing industry knowledge of herbicides. The workshops were co-ordinated by Independent Consultants Australia Network’s (ICAN) Mark Congreve, who has also developed technical manuals to complement the workshops, explaining the science that underpins how herbicides work.

“Greater knowledge of how herbicides work enables grain advisors to better optimise their advice to growers on herbicide use,” he said.

“Manuals and training covered both the soil behaviour of pre-emergent herbicides and the modes of action of post-emergent grass herbicides.

“In the pre-emergent workshop this included volatility, photodegradation, influence of organic matter, soil binding coefficients and cation exchange capacity of the soil. Also, water solubility, breakdown pathways and DT50values and how these product features coalesce to inform how different herbicides behave in the soil.

“For the post-emergent herbicides, we covered how different modes of action work, herbicide entry through the leaf, translocation and metabolism. The complexities of herbicide resistance and the implications these factors have in optimising performance of particular modes of action.”

Mr Congreve said more than 1000 advisors and growers attended the 57 workshops held across Queensland and NSW.

“The feedback post the workshops was very positive and supports the GRDC’s decision to invest in industry training,” he said.

“The broadacre agronomists who attended the workshops reported that the material presented was informative, easy to understand, had practical application and was complemented by the comprehensive technical materials that were part of the package.

“Importantly the material presented proved to be beneficial to both highly experienced and graduate agronomists.”

Mrs Green said the take home message message from the series of workshops was both growers and agronomists appreciate opportunities to learn new information and build on their knowledge in areas that have practical application in their day-to-day work.

“We were impressed by the feedback from workshop attendees and it has been the catalyst for ongoing GRDC investment in this area,” she said.

“The GRDC is committed to building industry capacity and that means investing in agronomists and growers so they have the skills and knowledge needed to guide on-farm management decisions that influence profitability.”

Mrs Green said the value advisors put on the technical manuals, developed as part of the workshop series, has also prompted the GRDC to make online versions available to all interested stakeholders.

“When advisors and agronomists tell us something is valuable and worth having we listen, hence our decision to make technical copies of the manual available beyond workshop attendees.”

Key grains events in Western Australia in February will hear how machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) could help create the next generation of nitrogen (N) fertiliser decision aids for grain growers.

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